extra 3

extra 3
Extra 3 logo
Genre Political satire
Developed by Dieter Kronzucker
Presented by Christian Ehring
Theme music composer Felice Sound Orchestra
Opening theme The Last Emperor
Country of origin Germany
Original language(s) German
Release
Original network ARD
Original release 21 June 1976 (1976-06-21)
External links
Website
Production website
Extra 3 studio

extra 3 is a weekly political satire show on German television established in 1976. Produced by public TV broadcaster Norddeutscher Rundfunk, it is aired on NDR Fernsehen and 3sat. Once a month, the show is promoted to ARD's national first program Das Erste.

Invented by Dieter Kronzucker in 1976, the satire show was initially hosted by himself together with Peter Merseburger and Wolf von Lojewski. Over the years, the show has seen a number of personalities co-hosting the magazine, starting with Lea Rosh, who joined the team in 1977. In 2000, a special edition was co-hosted by leading politicians Cem Özdemir (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen), Thomas Goppel (CSU), Guido Westerwelle (FDP) and Gregor Gysi (Die Linke).[1]

Current broadcast schedule

Weeks with first broadcast on NDR Fernsehen

Station Broadcast time
First broadcast:
Wednesday, 22:50
Repeats:
Sunday night
Thursday night; Friday night; Monday night
Thursday night
Sunday night

Weeks with first broadcast on Das Erste

Station Broadcast time
First broadcast:
Thursday, 22:45
Repeats:
Thursday evening
Friday night
Friday night
Sunday night
Monday night

Erdoğan controversy

In its nationally aired show on 17 March 2016, extra 3 presented a satirical music video titled "Erdowie, Erdowo, Erdogan", adapted from German pop star Nena's song Irgendwie, irgendwo, irgendwann. The two-minute video shows a compilation of some of the most absurd public moments of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and footage of the Turkish government's crackdown on the media, women rights protesters and Kurds, while taking a lenient stance on the "brothers in faith from ISIL". The video also criticizes chancellor Angela Merkel for her migrant deal with Turkey to putting Turkey in the role of cracking down on the refugee influx to the EU, mocking her to "be charming to him since he has you well in hand" (German: Sei schön charmant, denn er hat Dich in der Hand).[2]

On 22 March, Erdoğan summoned German ambassador Martin Erdmann over the song, asking the German government to intervene[3] and delete the video, as reported by AFP. While representatives of the German government declined to intervene, extra 3 followed up with English- and Turkish-subtitled versions of the video and republished a number of earlier videos criticizing the Turkish government.[4]

Erdoğan's unprecedented overreaction on a satire video produced an outcry by the German public with representatives of all German parties criticizing the situation of Press freedom in Turkey and reaffirming that Germany takes its press freedom seriously. Sevim Dağdelen, in charge for foreign policy at left-wing party Die Linke, demanded "a clear stand" from the foreign office, adding that "our fundamental rights cannot be sacrificed on the altar of the shabby EU-Turkey deal.”[4] As reported by a European Commission spokeswoman, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said he "does not appreciate" Turkey's decision to call in the ambassador because of a satirical song, and "believes this moves Turkey further from the EU rather than closer to us."[5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.